I'm not too worried about our "cap guy". Sure we've got plenty of cap space, but that's not nearly as hard to manage now with the rookie cap and all our young talent. I'm sure we can find another numbers guy to handle that part. I'm more concerned with the "football" guys. Losing our DC isn't too bad, because it's Pete's philosophy and we brought in another guy who knows the system, so we should be ok there. What is more interesting, to me anyway, is the Bevell situation. If he goes to Arizona, we'll have to put Wilson with a new play caller and that is something that could make the early portion of next year very interesting.

Reinfeldt is a bad GM, but he is a great cap manager. I just don't think he's a good talent evaluator. He's capable of making the numbers work every year, and was able to lock up the Walter Jones deal in a matter of days when they brought him back after he walked away from the game for a year.

I think he was put in the wrong position in Tennessee. He is a cap man. He's not a guy that should be running a draft board. That isn't to say Reinfeldt doesn't know football. He was a very good player in the NFL, he is a valued asset in a front office, and I think he'd do a terrific job managing the cap day to day with Schneider and Pete picking players, but I know that he is great at sitting down at the negotiating table and making contracts work.

Reinfeldt was the brainchild behind Hutch-gate. Didn't think any guard was worth LT money. He's good at managing cap space, but he's not an outside the box thinker.

If Idzik goes to New York, there is a chance he might pursue Flynn. The Jets were already a team that made a lot of sense for Flynn, and you have to believe Rex Ryan is desperate right now. And I really believe this- Flynn could probably get the Jets in playoff contention. The AFC is looking very weak next season. 9-7 would probably get in as a Wildcard.

I've heard Reinfeldt was, but interestingly enough I had never heard that story floated until this year. My understanding was always that Ruskell told him to go test the market and had assured Holmgren before he went on vacation that he'd be here.

Whether Reinfeldt floated it out there or not, the fact is that Ruskell signed off on it against Holmgren's wishes. I think Reinfeldt had a really good rapport with the players and was able to close deals where Whitsitt and Ferguson and others couldn't. He was a former player and I think guys respected that and saw that he was looking out for them and their futures and wouldn't try to scam them on a deal. Ruskell seems to be begging to get back in the good graces of everybody to get a job and as time passes the problems in Seattle are more the fault of Holmgren, Reinfeldt, Mora, Ruston Webster, Will Lewis, and everybody else in the front office. I don't buy it. Ruskell had final say in all football matters and said ok. It's on him, whether Reinfeldt felt it was a good idea or not would be immaterial with him negotiating contracts here Kearly, because Schneider and Pete are smart enough to not sign off on stupid ideas as the guys with the final say. Ruskell was, and blamed everybody else.

As far as dollars and cents go, Reinfeldt was able to sign every player that Ruskell wanted within the cap without going over. He kept Jones, Hass, and Alexander all at one time, which nobody thought would happen. Fact is, Reinfeldt makes numbers work. Blaming him for suggesting the transition tag isn't quite fair, because other people suggested it too and thought the Hawks could match. People on this very board suggested it as the thinking was a guard wouldn't get left tackle money on the open market, the Hawks could match, and Hutch claimed he'd come back and let the Hawks match any offer. So whose fault is it? Reinfeldt's? Seriously? Come on.

What has the fellow in Denver done? Put together an old team and paid a QB 18 million dollars? I guess he must be good if they are looking at him, but how are they for cap room? What would have happened to their cap if Manning had gotten hurt?

Reinfeldt was here before Ruskell and we always seemed to have cap room to work deals, but I am also sure that Schnieder and Pete know who is out there that can work numbers well. Schieder being in many organizations and Pete being all over the NFL.

Where the Cap guys are important about making things work I still think John sets value, I mean he has renegotiated several vets that were either not performing or underperforming. Working hand and hand with the purse strings. I am sure that will continue.

To Be P/C or Not P/C That is the Question..........Seahawks kick Ass !!!! Check your PM's, Thank you for everything Radish RIP My Friend. Member of the 38 club.

SharkHawk wrote:What has the fellow in Denver done? Put together an old team and paid a QB 18 million dollars? I guess he must be good if they are looking at him, but how are they for cap room? What would have happened to their cap if Manning had gotten hurt?

Not making a case for the guy from Denver (heck I couldn't even tell you his name without a google search), but one thing that the media types have said about that organization and the cap was about how smart it was that they signed Manning to what was basically 5 one-year deals instead of one 5 year deal, so if he can't pass a physical, they could just walk away. I don't know all the details as I didn't follow that signing. Once he spurned us, I moved on. I am just parroting what I have heard said during the playoffs.

Supposedly Idzik did have some say in player evaluation (I am assuming players on the roster, not potential draft targets).

From Seahawks.com:

With Seattle, Idzik oversees player negotiations, the team’s compliance with the NFL salary cap, player personnel transactions, all football operations budgets, staff and team contracts, team travel and most aspects of the day-to-day football operations while also remaining active in player evaluations.